HOURS

Open daily, 9:30am-5:15pm.

ACCESSIBILITY

Ferries are wheelchair accessible as are the Ellis Island museum and outside grounds. A limited number of wheelchairs are available on a first-come, first-served basis. Information on the history of Ellis Island is available in Braille at the information desk, and the video exhibitry in the main building contains captioning. Guided tours are available for free in American Sign Language. Get more information.

The portal to America for 12 million immigrants from 1892 to 1924

History of Ellis Island

Why and when did Ellis Island become an immigration center?SHOW ANSWER

During the 1800's, political, religious and economic unrest in Europe sparked a great migration across the Atlantic and into the United States. One of the busiest ports of call was New York Harbor and it soon became apparent that Castle Garden, the state-run immigration facility for New York, could not handle this growing annual wave. The federal government stepped in and constructed a new federally-operated immigration station on Ellis Island, which opened on January 1, 1892.

Prior to 1890, states regulated immigration into the United States. Castle Garden in the Battery (originally Castle Clinton) served as the immigration station for the State of New York -- from 1855 to 1890 -- serving approximately eight million immigrants before closing.

After World War I, the United States began establishing embassies all over the world and the processing of immigrants occurred in their home countries instead of Ellis Island, which was eventually phased out of use.

Who are some of the famous immigrants that came through Ellis Island?SHOW ANSWER

Some famous immigrants to come through Ellis Island are Actor Charles Chaplin, director Frank Capra, the Trapp Family (inspirers of The Sound of Music), actor Cary Grant and former New York City Mayor Abraham Beame.

The Immigrant Experience

Passengers in first and second class often had rooms to themselves, with beds, fresh water and bathroom facilities. They had access to the best food onboard and to the upper deck of the ships. Meanwhile, steerage or third class passengers traveled in crowded and often unsanitary conditions near the bottom of steamships with few amenities. They often spent weeks seasick in their bunks during rough Atlantic Ocean crossings. Their only respite -- and only when the weather was calm -- was the steerage deck, which offered fresh air.

The inspection and processing began even before immigrants got to Ellis Island. On entering the Lower Bay of New York Harbor, the ships would drop anchor and wait sometimes days for government doctors to board and check for instances of contagious disease. Those suspected of disease would be transferred to quarantined hospitals for treatment. First and second class passengers were exempted from rigorous exams unlike their steerage class shipmates. The ships would then proceed to Manhattan where first and second class passengers could disembark and enter the United States. Steerage class passengers however, were then loaded on barges with their possessions to Ellis Island.

On Ellis Island, immigrants were directed to steep staircases that led to the Registry Room. Doctors looked on, tagging the clothes of those who seemed ill or infirm with letters written in chalk so that doctors performing the more formal inspections would take note -- (L) for lameness, (X) for suspected mental illness, (E) for eye problems and so on.

In the Registry Room, hundreds waited for their names to be called and for formal medical, mental and legal examinations. All were invasive but none more so than the medical inspection, which required men and women to submit to personal and in most cases embarrassing examinations by strangers. The mental and legal inspections included simple puzzles and questions about an immigrant's criminal history, support of questionable organizations, literacy, whether they had jobs waiting in America and how much money they had on their person. Immigrants who survived and passed this gauntlet were deemed suitable for entry into the country.

Visiting Ellis Island

Visitors can wander through the main building and see permanent and visiting exhibitions on the history of the island and relevant topics. Visitors can also:

Go on free National Park Service Ranger-guided tours through Ellis Island's historic halls;

Watch Island of Hope, Island of Tears, an award-winning documentary shown in two theaters;

Search ship manifests at the American Family Immigration History Center, which contains the repository for over 22 million passenger records (manifests) for those arriving in the Port of New York between 1892 and 1924.

How can I look up immigrants who came through Ellis Island?SHOW ANSWER

You can look up immigrants on the island at the American Family Immigration station or at ellisisland.org.

Things to Do

Visit the Ellis Island museum in the former immigration station.

Exhibits attract visitors from across the nation and world.

Site Tours

DAILY, schedule posted at Info Desk

Immigration Museum

Historic Ferry Building Tours

TUE, THUR & FRI, 11:30am & 2:30pm (reservations required)

Other Activities

American Family Immigration Center, American Immigrant Wall of Honor, Ellis Island Living Theater, Island of Hope, Island of Fears documentary, audio tours, The Peopling of America exhibit and other temporary exhibits.